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Desert Tech SRS-A2 - Conversion Kit - 338 Lapua Mag - 18" - DT-SRS-CK-G18R
Desert Tech SRS-A2 - Conversion Kit - 338 Lapua Mag - 18" - DT-SRS-CK-G18R
 
Tech Specs at a Glance:

Caliber: 338 Lapua Mag
Barrel Length: 18.0"
Barrel Twist: 1:10"
Magazine Capacity: 5.0
Weight w/Chassis: 8.90 - 9.50 lbs.

Price: $2,999.00

Quantity Available:1


Caliber:


Description
 

Desert Tech SRS-A2 - Conversion Kit - 338 Lapua Mag - 18" - DT-SRS-CK-G18R:

The 18" 338 Lapua Magnum conversion kit includes a match grade barrel, bolt, bolt stop and magazine. This kit is compatible with the SRS-A1, A2, SRS-A2 Covert & SRS-M2 rifle chassis. Add this conversion kit to your collection of calibers to increase the utility of your SRS chassis

Features & Design:

  • Caliber: 338 Lapua Mag
  • Barrel Length: 18.0"
  • Barrel Twist: 1:10"
  • Magazine Capacity: 5.0
  • Weight w/Chassis: 8.90 - 9.50 lbs.
  • The bolt utilizes a 60 degree bolt throw for fast manipulation
  • Can be used with the SRS-A1, A2, SRS-A2 Covert & SRS-M2 Chassis
  • The patented muzzle break is designed to increase accuracy, shooter recovery, and reduce recoil by 30-40 percent

338 Lapua Magnum:

The .338 Lapua Magnum (8.6x70mm or 8.58x70mm) is a rimless, bottlenecked, centerfire cartridge developed for military long-range sniper rifles. The Afghanistan War and Iraq War made it a combat-proven round with ready and substantial ammunition availability. The .338 Lapua is a dual-purpose, anti-personnel and anti-materiel round, but its anti-materiel potential is limited, due to the bullet's lower kinetic energy compared with that of the .50 BMG's 35.64-to-55.08-gram (550.0 to 850.0 gr) projectiles. The loaded cartridge is 14.93 mm (0.588 in) in diameter (rim) and 93.5 mm (3.68 in) long. It can penetrate better-than-standard military body armour at ranges up to 1,000 meters (1,090 yd.) and has a maximum effective range of about 1,750 meters (1,910 yd.). Muzzle velocity is dependent on load and powder temperature, and varies from 880 to 915 m/s (2,890 to 3,000 ft/s) for commercial loads with 16.2-gram (250 gr) bullets, which corresponds to about 6,525 J (4,813 ft-lbf) of muzzle energy.

British military issue overpressure .338 Lapua Magnum cartridges with a 91.4 mm (3.60 in) overall length, loaded with 16.2-gram (250 gr) LockBase B408 very-low-drag bullets fired at 936 m/s (3,071 ft./s) muzzle velocity from a L115A3 Long Range Rifle were used in November 2009 by British sniper Corporal of Horse (CoH) Craig Harrison to establish a new record for the longest confirmed sniper kill in combat, at a range of 2,475 m (2,707 yd.).

In addition to its military role, it is increasingly used by hunters and civilian long-range shooting enthusiasts. The .338 Lapua Magnum is capable of taking down any game animal, though its suitability for some dangerous game (Cape buffalo, hippopotamus, white rhinoceros, and elephant) is arguable, unless accompanied by a larger "backup" caliber: "There is a huge difference between calibers that will kill an elephant and those that can be relied upon to stop one." In Namibia the .338 Lapua Magnum is legal for hunting Africa's Big five game if the loads have = 5,400 J (3,983 ft-lbf) muzzle energy

Suggested Use:
  • Deer
  • Big Bear
  • Sheep / Goat
  • Moose
  • Elk
  • Buffalo / Bison
  • Dangerous Predators
  • Anything that you could legally shoot

Performance:

For a typical .338 Lapua Magnum high end factory military sniper rifle with a 690 mm (27.2 in) long 305 mm (1 in 12 inch) rifling twist rate barrel at sea level, 1,500 m (1,640 yd.) is considered to be the maximum shooting distance for man sized targets. When using standard Lapua military 16.2 g (250 gr) loads it has a supersonic range of 1,500 m (1,640 yd.) under warm summer conditions at a muzzle velocity of 915 m/s (3,000 ft./s). However, to be able to maintain 80 to 90% hit probability on non-moving 45 cm x 90 cm (17.7 in x 35.4 in) reactive army targets, this maximum shooting distance has to be reduced to 1,300 meters (1,422 yd.) at freezing point conditions or 1,100 m (1,203 yd.) in Arctic winter conditions, when the muzzle velocity may drop to 880 m/s (2,887 ft./s)-i.e. only during optimal warm summer conditions the 1,500 m (1,640 yd.) maximum shooting distance is realistically achievable.